[personal profile] petardier
Hidden away in The Critics section of the August 30 New Yorker is an article on how people make decisions about voting. With my software engineering background, I'm wired to think that important decisions should be made in a logical, deliberate way, so this article was a shock to my system. Before I get deep into the substance of the article, here's something to think about:

In 2000, eighteen percent said they decided which Presidential candidate to vote for only in the last two weeks of the campaign; five percent, enough to swing most elections, decided the day they voted.

That would seem to suggest that polls don't begin to mean much until just before the election. So obsessing about the polls is a waste of worry that could be better invested elsewhere.

Now for the meat of the article. After mentioning some basic factors that influence votes, the article references political scientist Phillip Converse's 1964 article "On the Nature of Belief Systems in Mass Publics".

Converse claimed that only ten percent of the public has what can be called, 
even generously, a political belief system.  He named these people "ideologues", by 
which he meant not that they are fanatics, but that they have a reasonable grasp 
of "what goes with what" - of how a set of opinions adds up to a coherent political 
philosophy.  Non-ideologues may use terms like "liberal" and "conservative", but 
Converse thought they basically don't know what they're talking about, ...  they 
can't see how one opinion (that taxes should be lower, for example) logically ought 
to rule out others (such as the belief that there should be more government 
programs).  About 42 percent of voters, according to Converse's interpretation of 
the 1956 electorate, vote on the basis not of ideology but of perceived self-
interest.  The rest form political preferences from their sense of whether times 
are good or bad (about 25 percent) or from factors that have no discernible "issue 
content" whatever.  Converse places 22 percent of the electorate in the last 
category.  In other words, about twice as many people have no political views 
as have a coherent political belief system.


Any political scientists out this have comments on this? I'd be especially interested to know if these numbers have been re-checked recently.

Unfortunately, this article isn't to be found on the New Yorker's web site. If you'd like a copy of it, get in touch. I'll send you a copy (assuming the number of requests doesn't get out of hand, that this).

This post has become quite large; I'll save the rest for later.

As the dude in Dr. Zhivago says...

Date: 2004-09-17 09:42 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
"everything is politics" (even love). Now I don't know that I agree completely with that, but I do think that if you have been alive 30+ years you ought to have a coherent political philosophy. I mean, how complicated is it to think, "Government should be small, therefore I don't want a handout program, even if it is for me (unless it is really, really juicy)," or "Government is how we collectively spend our money to achieve our goals. Some programs that individuals cannot accomplish are better done by governments that are properly regulated." Those would be pretty bare bones, and maybe the researcher would not think of those as fleshed-out philosophies, but were those that complicated?
Mike-n-Mallie

Re: As the dude in Dr. Zhivago says...

Date: 2004-09-19 09:29 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] petardier.livejournal.com
It's surprising to those of us who do have coherent political philosophies that there are lots of people out there who don't. That's one reason I wanted to highlight ideas from that article. It's got details like this:
According to polls conducted between 1987 and 1989, 20-25 percent of the public thinks too 
little is being spent on welfare, and between 60-65 percent feels that too little is being 
spent on assistance to the poor.

People seem very vulnerable to how questions (and issues) are presented. The Republicans have been consistently effective at framing the issues in such a way that their outcome is favored by the public. The Democrats need to get better at this.

Stay tuned for Voter Behavior, part 2.

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